Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Musical about would-be killers hits the right note

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TEPHEN Sondheim’s awardwinni­ng musical Assassins presents the nine men and women who made successful or unsuccessf­ul attempts on the lives of US presidents since Abraham Lincoln.

Sondheim’s music and the characters are complex and the immensely talented Dewsbury Arts Group cast performing at the Artspace mastered both under the direction of the brilliant David Fletcher.

Assassins is an ensemble piece and the cast, who perform in principal roles across the area, skilfully managed the task of taking centre stage when it was their turn in the proprietor’s fairground assassinat­ion game while strongly supporting each other in ensemble.

The characteri­sation from all cast members was superb, each applying their theatrical instincts to portraying the assassins and communicat­ing their motives through expert delivery of dialogue.

There was an interestin­g contrast between the assassins – driven by anger at the perceived social or economic failure of Lincoln, McKinley and Hoover through to the attentions­eeking attempt on Regan’s life – and the embodiment of the American Dream in the Balladeer. Event: Performers: Review by:

The puppet-master roles of the fairground proprietor and, intriguing­ly, John Wilkes Booth were similarly strong in building this fascinatin­g story.

The story builds to that fateful day on the Grassy Knoll in Dallas in 1963 and presents an interestin­g idea for what drove Lee Harvey Oswald to assassinat­e John F Kennedy: the legacy of this gallery of assassins and the destructio­n of the rosy American Dream.

Despite a shocking final scene, there is humour in the piece and some great tunes which many in the audience were singing on their way out.

Some were heard planning when they would see the show again such was this opening night success. Highly recommende­d. The show runs until this Saturday, July 1 at the Artspace, Lower Peel Street, Dewsbury.

Tickets go to www. dewsburyar­tsgroup.info or call box office on 0333666336­6

Hotline number for DAG is 01924 505861.

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